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Multi-Institutional, Prospective Clinical Utility Study Evaluating the Impact of the 92-Gene Assay (CancerTYPE ID) on Final Diagnosis and Treatment Planning in Patients With Metastatic Cancer With an Unknown or Unclear Diagnosis
- Source :
- JCO Precision Oncology. :1-12
- Publication Year :
- 2018
- Publisher :
- American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), 2018.
-
Abstract
- Purpose Metastatic cancers of unknown primary or with unclear diagnoses pose diagnostic and management challenges, often leading to poor outcomes. Studies of the 92-gene assay have demonstrated improved diagnostic accuracy compared with standard pathology techniques and improved survival in patients treated on the basis of assay results. The current study assessed the clinical impact of the 92-gene assay on diagnostic and treatment decisions for patients with unknown or uncertain diagnoses. Methods Patients in this prospective, multi-institutional, decision-impact study included those for whom the 92-gene assay was ordered as part of routine care. Participating physicians completed electronic case report forms that contained standardized, specialty-specific questionnaires. Data collection included patient and tumor characteristics and clinical history. The key study objective of clinical impact was calculated on the basis of changes in final diagnosis and treatment after testing. Results Data collection included 444 patients, 107 physicians (73 oncologists and 34 pathologists), and 28 sites. Molecular diagnoses from 22 different tumor types and subtypes across all cases were provided in 95.5% of patients with a reportable result (n = 397). Physicians reported that the 92-gene assay was used broadly for diagnostic dilemmas that ranged from single suspected tumor type (29%) to a differential diagnosis of two or more suspected tumor types (30%) or cancers of unknown primary (41%). Integration of 92-gene assay results led to a change in the recommended treatment in 47% of patients. Conclusion Findings from this clinical utility study demonstrate that the 92-gene assay led to a change in treatment decisions in every other patient case. These data additionally define the role of this assay in clinical practice and strongly support the consideration of molecular tumor typing in the diagnosis and treatment planning of patients with metastatic cancer with unknown or uncertain diagnosis.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Cancer Research
medicine.medical_specialty
business.industry
Improved survival
Cancer
medicine.disease
03 medical and health sciences
030104 developmental biology
0302 clinical medicine
Oncology
Clinical history
030220 oncology & carcinogenesis
medicine
Unknown primary
In patient
Medical diagnosis
Intensive care medicine
Radiation treatment planning
business
Routine care
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 24734284
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- JCO Precision Oncology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....21f0d9b2969108fb90ddf4a5ef28a4b0